external-link
Skip to content
  • Français
    • Getting startedLearn about the stock market, investment types, and how to get started.
    • Understanding riskLearn about the risk-return relationship, risk tolerance, and why it matters.
    • Building your investing strategyYour investing strategy is personal. Learn about asset mix, active versus passive investing, and more.
    • DIY investingDo-it-yourself investing or self-directed investing is when you build and manage your own investment portfolio.
    • Psychology of InvestingMake better financial decisions by learning about behavioural insights.
    • Working with an advisorA financial advisor can help you choose investments and manage your portfolio.
    • Tracking your progressLearn how to track your investing progress and see how you're doing.
    • Rules and regulationsRegulators protect investors in Canada by setting and enforcing securities rules.
    • Community outreachOSC in the Community takes the OSC's mandate from Bay Street to Main Street.
    • AnnuitiesAnnuities are an investment that can generate a steady income in retirement.
    • BondsBonds are an investment that generate interest after a fixed period of time.
    • Crypto assetsCrypto assets are digital investments with different opportunities and risks.
    • ESG investingESG investing allows you to choose investments that align with your priorities.
    • ETFs (exchange-traded funds)These funds hold a collection of investments and are traded on a stock exchange.
    • GICs (Guaranteed investment certificates)GICs guarantee a specific rate of return over a short period of time.
    • Mutual funds & segregated fundsMutual funds pool multiple investments into a fund owned by many investors.
    • Pension & savings plansDifferent kinds of workplace pension plans provide retirement income.
    • Real estateBuying a home is a way to invest your money and diversify your portfolio.
    • StocksStocks give you equity in a company, and are traded on a stock exchange.
    • More complex investmentsComplex investments have potential for high reward, but also higher risk.
    • RDSPPeople with disabilities can save with a Registered Disability Savings Plan.
    • RESPSave for your child's education with a Registered Education Savings Plan.
    • RRIFYou open a Registered Retirement Income Fund with funds from your RRSP.
    • RRSPA Registered Retirement Savings Plan grows your savings tax free until you retire.
    • TFSAA Tax-Free Savings Account helps you save for any goal, tax free.
    • Bank accountsChequing and savings accounts can help you manage your short-term needs.
    • BudgetingA budget can help you manage your spending, saving, and plan for the unexpected.
    • Life EventsLearn about how your financial needs may change at different stages of life.
    • Making a planHaving a plan can make it easier to make the right investing decisions for you.
    • Managing debtDebt shouldn't get in the way of your saving and investing. Learn how to manage it.
    • Personal insurancePersonal insurance coverage can help protect you and your loved ones.
    • RetirementPlanning for retirement helps you determine how much to save and where.
    • Running a small businessImprove your financial knowledge for your business and your personal life.
    • Saving moneyKeep your financial goals on track by saving some money each month.
    • Understanding taxLearn more about how tax filing and tax deductions work.
    • Wills and estate planningPreparing a will and estate plan ensure your final wishes are taken care of.
    • Types of fraudLearn to spot and avoid frauds and scams.
    • Making a complaintKnow your options for making a complaint.
    • Reporting fraudIf you suspect you've been a victim of fraud, report it immediately.
    • Checking registrationAlways check the registration of anyone trying to give advice or sell investments.
    • Investor warnings and alerts
    • CalculatorsPractice calculating compound interest, savings, debt consolidation, and more.
    • Quizzes and toolsCheck your knowledge of scams, behavioural biases, and other financial tools.
    • WorksheetsTry our downloadable tools to help you plan and budget.
    • VideosOur videos show you the basics of investment types, frauds to watch for, and more.
    • Investing chartsSee the impact of market ups, downs, and more based on historic data.
    • Research & reportsDive into groundbreaking research to better understand retail investor behaviours, attitudes and experiences.
    • Investing introductionIf you’re new to Canada or investing visit our multilingual site for more information in 23 languages.
    • Investor NewsStay informed about the latest investor initiatives, educational resources, and warnings/alerts.
    • Investing questionsFind unbiased answers to your investing questions from a trusted source.
  • Investing Academy

GetSmarterAboutMoney.ca

Français
When autocomplete results are available use up and down arrows to review and enter to go to the desired page. Touch device users, explore by touch or with swipe gestures.

Home / Investing insights / Research & reports / Can gamification help investors?

Can gamification help investors?

5 min read

Share

  • Share to Twitter
  • Share to Facebook
  • Share to LinkedIn
  • Share to Reddit
  • Share via Email

The OSCOSC See Ontario Securities Commission.+ read full definition conducted research to explore how gamification could enhance investor decision-making and outcomes. Find out more about positive ways to uses gamification and also techniques designed to prevent  the negative influence of gamification on investor behaviour.  

On this page you’ll find

  • What is gamification and how can it be used to help investors?
  • Why is it important to understand the influence of gamification on investors?
  • How was the experiment conducted and what did it find?
  • How can investors safely benefit from gamification?

What is gamification and how can it be used to help investors?

If you use digital investing platforms, you may have noticed game-like elements such as points, rewards, leaderboards or other similarities to games. These elements are known as gamification techniques, and they can influence your behaviour in many ways. Investing is not a game. It’s important to stay alert to how some investing platforms may try to influence your trading behaviour, especially when it’s not in your best interest. For example, gamification techniques may cause you to incur fees or make decisions that are inconsistent with your investing goals.

Gamification techniques are not inherently good or bad. Their impact depends on how they are applied and the specific outcomes they aim to achieve.

Gamification could positively influence your behaviour and outcomes, such as through:

  • Reducing cognitive load: Gamification can simplify complex tasks by breaking them into smaller, more manageable steps. For example, a financial planning app might guide you through setting a budgetBudget A monthly or yearly estimated plan for spending and saving. You work it out based…+ read full definition using a step-by-step process, reducing decision fatigue and helping you follow through on your intentions.
  • Leveraging social influence: Social references, like peer comparisons, can encourage positive investor behaviour. Platforms might show users with low savings rates how their behaviour compares with others in their age group to encourage increased savings. Other social gamification tactics may be able to help too, like encouraging families or friends to engage with educational content together (or refer each other to it).
  • Using design features to increase motivation: Features like badges, progress bars, or achievement streaks can help you see and celebrate your progress towards a specific goal. Particularly effective uses of feedback and progress indicators tap into goal gradient theory — the idea that people become more motivated as they get closer to a goal. For example, a savings tool might show that you are 80% of the way to your goal, encouraging you to stay on track or save a little more. 

Gamification has the potential to improve investor education and encourage a wide range of positive investing behaviours, including more deliberate investmentInvestment An item of value you buy to get income or to grow in value.+ read full definition decisions.

Why is it important to understand the influence of gamification on investors?

Some gamification techniques could be used to encourage you to engage in more negative behaviours like trading more frequently or only trading certain investments. This can potentially lead to results that are not the right fit for you personally as an investor.

The OSC has done extensive research to understand how gamification, and digital engagement practices more broadly, influence investor behaviour. Understanding how gamification may influence your trading and investing behaviour is important to ensuring that digital engagement practices support, rather than undermine, your investing decisions.

  • Previous research looking at gamification and other behavioural techniques found that providing investors with “points” for buying or selling stocks increased trading frequency by almost 40%.
  • Follow-up research found that social gamification elements, such as social interactions and copy trading, led to a 12% and 18% increase in trading of promoted stocks, respectively. Gaming the system: Are you being influenced when trading online?
  • Shedding light on dark patterns examined dark patterns and how these techniques are being used on investing platforms. It also looked at how regulators in Canada, the U.S., and the EU are responding.

Beyond this research, the OSC conducted a new experiment to examine how gamification could help, rather than harm, investor decision-making.

Read the full report Gamification and Retail Investing: Positive Use Cases and Mitigation Techniques.

How was the experiment conducted and what did it find?

More than 4,000 Canadians participated in the OSC’s online experiment. Participants were given $10,000 in play money to investInvest To use money for the purpose of making more money by making an investment. Often…+ read full definition across eight stocks in a simulated trading environment. They were exposed to gamification techniques designed to increase the diversificationDiversification A way of spreading investment risk by by choosing a mix of investments. The idea…+ read full definition of their portfolios. Diversification is an investing strategy that helps people manage exposure to risk by spreading their investments across different assets.

Within the experiment, participants encountered one of four gamification techniques designed to increase their diversification:

  • Diversification Score – a real-time score (out of 100) based on diversification level
  • Goal Framing – setting diversification goals and tracking progress in reaching those goal
  • Leaderboards – comparing diversification scores to other users  
  • Rewards (Badges) – awarding badges for meeting diversification thresholds 

Overall, the experiment found gamification could be used to encourage positive investor behaviours. All four techniques were found to have a modest yet positive impact. Exposure to the techniques led to a 3.5% to 4.5% increase in portfolioPortfolio All the different investments that an individual or organization holds. May include stocks, bonds and…+ read full definition diversification. 

The OSC’s Investor Research and Behavioural Science Team partnered with the Behavioural Insights Team (BIT) on the study.  

How can investors safely benefit from gamification?

Our report includes a few recommendations to encourage the responsible use of gamification. The recommendations for authorities, who work to protect you as an investor, include ensuring regulatory and supervisory activities do not prevent positive uses of gamification. This means that regulations should address the risks of gamification techniques, while also enabling innovative approaches that improve investor outcomes and decision-making.

The report also recommends that authorities conduct more research on effective gamification mitigation practices and positive use cases in conjunction with regulatory policy development. By investigating and testing mitigation strategies, regulators can develop evidence-based policy and encourage platform operators to deploy these techniques to protect investors. Additional research into positive use cases, conducted by firms, regulators, and others, could explore areas such as savings habits, appropriate risk-taking, and deterring scams and fraud.

Additionally, regulators, other government bodies and other stakeholders should look to apply gamification techniques to investor education activities.

For example, the OSC developed GetSmarterAboutTrading.ca. It uses gamification techniques in a simulated trading environment designed to let you practice trading without risking real money. Using gamified elements in educational initiatives may help improve learning outcomes for investors and lead to more informed decision-making.

Try GetSmarterAboutTrading.ca to see how you may be influenced by gamification tactics in a simulated stock marketStock market The collection of markets and exchanges where stocks, bonds and other securities are issued or…+ read full definition. 

Last updated February 3, 2026

Research & reports

Articles in this section

Articles read
Can gamification help investors? 5 min read
Finfluencer powers of persuasion 4 min read
Gaming the system: Are you being influenced when trading online? 4 min read
AI-enhanced scams: risks and safeguards 6 min read
Artificial intelligence and investor behaviour 4 min read
Shedding light on dark patterns 6 min read
Profiles of retirement 6 min read
ESG ratings and retail investor decision making 3 min read
Gamification & other behavioural techniques 3 min read
Canadian crypto survey results for 2023 4 min read
Canadian attitudes about crypto - 2022 4 min read
Self-Directed Investors: Insights and Experiences 2 min read
Investing and the COVID-19 Experience 3 min read
Protecting Aging Investors through Behavioural Insights 3 min read
The Investor Experience 2020 2 min read
Financial Literacy: A Foundation of the Investor Experience 3 min read
Improving Fee Disclosure through Behavioural Insights 5 min read
Encouraging Retirement Planning through Behavioural Insights 5 min read
National Investor Research Study 3 min read
Getting Started: Human-Centred Solutions to Engage Ontario Millenials in Investing 6 min read
Taking Caution: Financial Consumers and the Cryptoasset Sector 4 min read
MISSING OUT: Millenials and the Market 9 min read
MISSING OUT: Report and Resources 2 min read
Investing as we age 4 min read
Behavioural insights: key concepts, applications, and regulatory considerations 4 min read
IOSCO C8 Report on Senior Investor Vulnerability 4 min read
Retirement Readiness: Canadians 50+ 3 min read
Investor risk, behaviour and beliefs 2 min read
Financial Life Stages of Older Canadians 2 min read
Home equity as a source of retirement income survey 2 min read

Feedback Survey

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Not likely
Would you recommend this content?(Required)
Not likely Extremely likely

Post navigation

Back To:
Previous: Finfluencer powers of persuasion
4 min read
Up Next:
Next: Gamification & other behavioural techniques
3 min read

Sign up for Investor News

Join 18,000+ subscribers and stay informed with timely articles, the latest investor warnings and financial literacy resources like videos, calculators and quizzes.

Past issues
  • January 13, 2026
  • December 16, 2025
  • November 25, 2025
GetSmarterAboutMoney.ca

Connect with us

Facebook Twitter YouTube Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Investor News
  • Media
  • Glossary
  • OSC in the community
  • OSC Website
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Accessibility policy

Brought to you by the OSC Investor Office

This website is provided for informational purposes only and is not a source of official OSC policy or a substitute for legal or financial advice. We recommend that you consult with a qualified professional advisor before acting on any information appearing on this website. For details, please see our full Terms of Use and Privacy policy

© Ontario Securities Commission 2026

Go back to top Reference Only